From April 7, 2022, creditors cannot sue or make a threat to sue consumers (implicitly or explicitly) on debts that are older than three years, down from six years in most cases. Moreover, any payment a consumer makes after that three-year period cannot be used to revive the time-barred debt.Mar 29, 2022
New York News
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IDENTITY THEFT STATISTICS
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Some analysts estimate that you’re four times more likely to be killed by hornets, wasps, or bees than to have a winning lottery ticket. Others have noted that you’d have a better chance of falling out of bed (2 million to 1), getting struck by lightning (1.2 million to 1), or drawing a royal flush in the first hand of poker (649,739 to 1). By comparison, your odds of winning the lottery average about 300 million to 1.
If only those were the same odds as becoming a victim of identity theft.
Unfortunately, even though people may think this type of criminal activity is somewhat rare, identity theft statistics show that your chances of being affected might be much higher than you think. This is especially true if you’re in a high-risk group, like those affected by data breaches or living in certain states.
Identity Theft By the Numbers
Consider these identity theft statistics:
Consumers filed 2.2 million fraud reports last year, accounting for $3.3 billion in losses
47% of Americans experienced financial identity theft in 2020
9 in 10 Americans encountered a fraud attempt in the past year
1 in 6 people (33 million Americans) lost money to a scam last year
Seniors over 60 years old are the most common victims of identity theft
3 in 10 victims of identity theft have experienced it more than once
1 in 50 children is affected by child identity fraud, which costs U.S. families nearly $1 billion each year
Millennials account for 44% of U.S. identity fraud reports
There’s a new victim of identity theft every 2 seconds
118.6 million individuals had their records exposed in data breaches during the first half of 2021
Consumers lost more than $56 billion to identity theft and fraud in 2020
Taxpayers lost over $200 billion to unemployment identity theft and COVID-19 relief fraud since March 2020
Consumers reported over $588 million lost to coronavirus scams and identity fraud since January 2020
1 in 3 consumers was recently targeted for digital fraud related to COVID-19
54% of victims of unemployment and stimulus identity fraud in 2020 report more stress and feeling violated
In other words, if your chances of winning the lottery were 1 in 20 – the odds of being an ID theft victim – we’d all have family, friends, and colleagues who are millionaires.
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